Take Heed How You Hear
By John Piper
Ten Practical Preparations
for Hearing the Word of God on Sunday Morning - A Meditation on Luke
8:18
- Pray that God would give you a good and honest
heart.
- The heart we need is a work of God. That's why we pray for it.
Ezekiel 36:26, "I will give you a new heart." Jeremiah 24:7, "I will
give them a heart to know Me." Let's pray, "O Lord, give me a heart for
you. Give me a good and honest heart. Give me a soft and receptive
heart. Give me a humble and meek heart. Give me an fruitful heart."
- Meditate on the Word of God.
- Psalm 34:8, "O taste and see that the LORD is good." On Saturday
night read some delicious portion of your Bible with a view to stirring
up hunger for God. This is the appetizer for Sunday morning's meal.
- Purify your mind by turning away from worldly
entertainment.
- James 12:1, "Putting aside all filthiness and all that remains of
wickedness, in humility receive the word implanted, which is able to
save your souls." It astonishes me how many Christians watch the same
banal, empty, silly, trivial, titillating, suggestive, immodest TV shows
that most unbelievers watch. This makes us small and weak and worldly
and inauthentic in worship. Instead, turn off the television on
Saturday night and read something true and great and beautiful and pure
and honorable and excellent and worthy of praise (Philippians 4:8). Your
heart will unshrivel and be able to feel greatness again.
- Trust in the truth that you already have.
- The hearing of the word of God that fails during trial has no root
(Luke 8:13). What is the root we need? It is trust. Jeremiah 17:7-8
says, "Blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD and whose trust is the
LORD. For he will be like a tree planted by the water, that extends its
roots by a stream." Trusting in the truth you already have is the best
way to prepare yourself to receive more.
- Rest long enough Saturday night to be alert and hopeful
Sunday morning.
- 1 Corinthians 6:12, "All things are lawful for me, but I will not be
enslaved by anything." I am not laying down any law here. I am saying
there are Saturday night ways that ruin Sunday morning worship. Don't be
enslaved by them. Without sufficient sleep, our minds are dull, our
emotions are flat, our proneness to depression is higher, and our fuses
are short. My counsel decide when you must get up on Sunday in order to
have time to eat, get dressed, pray and meditate on the Word, prepare
the family, and travel to church; and then compute backward eight hours
and be sure that you are in bed 15 minutes before that. Read your Bible
in bed and fall asleep with the Word of God in your mind. I especially
exhort parents to teach teenagers that Saturday is NOT the night to stay
out late with friends. If there is a special late night, make it Friday.
It is a terrible thing to teach children that worship is so optional
that it doesn't matter if you are exhausted when you come.
- Forebear one another Sunday morning without grumbling and
criticism.
- Psalm 106:25, "They grumbled in their tents; they did not listen to
the voice of the LORD." Sunday morning grumbling and controversy and
quarreling can ruin a worship service for a family. When there is
something you are angry about or some conflict that you genuinely think
needs to be talked about, forebear. Of course if you are clearly the
problem and need to apologize, do it as quickly as you can (Matthew
5:23-24). But if you are fuming because of children or spouse
delinquency, forebear, that is, be slow to anger and quick to listen
(James 1:19). In worship open yourself to God's exposing the log in your
own eye. It may be that all of you will be humbled and chastened so that
no conflict is necessary.
- Be meek and teachable when you come.
- James 12:1 "In meekness receive the word implanted, which is able to
save your souls." Meekness and teachability are not gullibility. You
have your Bible and you have your brain. Use them. But if we come with a
chip on our shoulder and a suspicion of the preaching week after week,
we will not hear the Word of God. Meekness is a humble openness to God's
truth with a longing to be changed by it.
- Be still as you enter the room and focus your mind's
attention and heart's affection on God.
- Psalm 46:10, "Be still, and know that I am God." As we enter the
sanctuary, let us "come on the lookout for God and leave on the lookout
for people." Come with a quiet passion to seek God and his power. We
will not be an unfriendly church if we are aggressive in our pursuit of
God during the prelude and aggressive in our pursuit of visitors during
the postlude.
- Think earnestly about what is sung and prayed and
preached.
- 1 Corinthians 14:20, "Brethren, do not be children in your thinking;
yet in evil be infants, but in your thinking be mature". So Paul says to
Timothy, "Think over what I say, for the Lord will give you
understanding in everything" (2 Timothy 2:7). Anything worth hearing is
worth thinking about. If you would take heed how you hear, think about
what you hear.
- Desire the Truth of God's Word more than you desire
riches or food.
- 1 Peter 2:2 "Like newborn babies, desire the pure milk of the word,
so that by it you may grow in respect to salvation." As you sit quietly
and pray and meditate on the text and the songs, remind yourself of what
Psalm 19:10-11 says about the Words of God "More to be desired are they
than gold, even much fine gold; sweeter also than honey and drippings of
the honeycomb.
Pastor John
Copyright
Bethlehem Baptist Church. For a free Resource Catalog from Desiring God Ministries,
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